Christopher Harborne is British-born, Cambridge-educated, and has lived in Thailand since 1996. He goes by the Thai name Chakrit Sakunkrit, holds Thai citizenship, and controls a reported 12% stake in Tether, the stablecoin issuer behind roughly $184 billion in circulating USDT.
According to the Guardian’s investigation, he’s also the single largest donor in the history of UK party politics, having directed more than £24 million toward Reform UK and its predecessor movements since 2019.
So, a man who doesn’t live in the UK, whose fortune is tied to a global crypto infrastructure company operating outside any single jurisdiction, has been bankrolling a party that leads current opinion polling with a platform built around sovereign identity and anti-establishment politics.
Whether that looks hypocritical or like rational self-interest depends entirely on your view of what political money is supposed to represent, and that question is exactly what the UK government has now moved to resolve. The way it’s gone about doing so reveals just how poorly existing political finance law was designed for the crypto era.
A stake in Tether, a stake in politics
Harborne’s wealth is rooted in early crypto. According to the Guardian, he began buying Bitcoin in 2011 and became a major Ethereum holder by 2014, with those early positions now accounting for a substantial portion of his net worth.
His reported 12% stake in Tether is where the numbers get really, really big. The company generates roughly $10 billion in annual profit and has been described as one of the most profitable companies per employee in history, meaning even a minority stake translates into serious wealth. Harborne’s lawyers have stressed that he’s a passive investor with no executive role and no control over company policy, a distinction that matters when assessing what his donations to a UK political party actually represent.
What we know from these reports is pretty thin: Harborne is a wealthy individual whose fortune happens to be tied to crypto infrastructure, and he’s chosen to direct a significant portion of that fortune into UK politics. His £9 million donation in late 2025, confirmed by the Electoral Commission, set a record as the largest single contribution by a living person to a UK political party. A further £3 million followed in March 2026, according to the Guardian, bringing his total to more than £24 million since 2019, which represents roughly two-thirds of all funding Reform UK has ever received.
The convergence between Harborne’s financial interests and Reform’s political platform deserves attention. Nigel Farage has made crypto advocacy a central element of his pitch to voters, promising a state-owned Bitcoin reserve, a 10% flat capital gains tax on crypto, and significant deregulation of the digital asset sector. Reform has pushed back against the Bank of England’s proposed stablecoin limits, arguing that privately issued stablecoins should be encouraged and that a state-backed digital currency would give the Bank “unprecedented control” over financial activity. The party has also been among the first UK political groups to accept donations in BTC and other digital assets.
Reform has denied that donors have influenced policy decisions. What these facts tell us, clearly enough to have drawn regulatory attention, is how closely the interests of the party’s dominant financial backer and its official political platform happen to align.
What the UK government just changed
The Rycroft Review, an independent inquiry commissioned by the government in December 2025 and published on March 25, 2026, provided the formal basis for the new measures. Led by former senior civil servant Philip Rycroft, the review found that the UK faces a persistent and worsening problem of foreign financial interference in its political system.
Communities Secretary Steve Reed told the House of Commons that the threat “has become arguably more acute,” citing the complexity of tracing overseas funds and the opacity of cryptocurrency ownership as the two most significant vulnerabilities in the existing framework.
The government’s response covered both. British citizens living abroad who remain on the UK electoral register now face an annual cap of £100,000 on political donations, including loans and other regulated transactions. All crypto donations to political parties are subject to an immediate moratorium, effective from March 25, with no threshold and no exceptions. Both measures are being written into the Representation of the People Bill with retrospective effect, giving political parties 30 days from the legislation’s passage to return any donations that fall outside the new rules, after which criminal enforcement begins.
The crypto moratorium is framed as a holding measure, with the conditions for lifting it tied to regulatory progress. The Electoral Commission had previously acknowledged that digital assets “present particular challenges and risks in meeting electoral law requirements,” and Rycroft stopped short of calling for a permanent ban.
Given that crypto regulation in the UK is still being developed, with the FCA slowly working through frameworks for stablecoins, custody, and staking, meeting the traceability threshold the government has set is going to take time.
Electoral reform advocates have argued the measures still don’t go far enough: in the year before the 2024 general election, UK political parties received 18 separate donations of £1 million or more. The overseas cap addresses one pathway into that system. The domestic donation landscape, where large contributions from UK-resident individuals remain entirely uncapped, is a separate problem the government hasn’t moved on from.
What this means for insurgent parties, future donors, and elections
The impact falls most immediately on Reform UK. Harborne’s contributions have represented such a disproportionate share of the party’s total funding that the £100,000 annual cap would reduce his permissible donations by more than 99% going forward.
The party currently holds eight of the 650 seats in the House of Commons and has depended on major donations to operate at a national scale in ways its membership base and fundraising infrastructure couldn’t otherwise support on their own. The next general election is scheduled for 2029, and the gap between where Reform’s donor base is now and where it needs to be for a credible national campaign is significant.
The structural issue extends well beyond Reform. Newer parties face the same foundational challenge everywhere: they don’t have the union networks, legacy business relationships, or decades-old donor pipelines that established parties rely on.
A single major donor can compress years of organizational development into a single transaction, funding staff, advertising, and event infrastructure in a way that lets a small party compete nationally almost immediately. Capping overseas donors at £100,000 closes a specific version of that pathway, and the broader questions about donor concentration in democratic politics remain open.
The residency question is where the policy gets philosophically interesting. Citizenship has traditionally been treated as the primary marker of belonging to a political community, and Harborne retains his British citizenship in full.
The new framework treats residency as the more meaningful standard when it comes to political funding at scale, reasoning that people who live under the daily consequences of a country’s laws and policies should carry greater weight in shaping its elections. It’s a defensible position, and it reflects a coherent democratic intuition. It’s also one that will face growing pressure as crypto wealth continues to internationalize, producing a class of globally mobile investors whose political affiliations and financial interests span multiple jurisdictions at once.
The Rycroft Review flagged threats from Russia, China, Iran, and allied countries alike, recognizing that financial interference in democratic processes is a broad and evolving risk. Crypto’s foundational architecture is decentralized, pseudonymous, and designed to function across borders without institutional intermediaries.
Those properties are what make USDT useful for moving value globally, and they’re what make regulators uncomfortable about tracing the origins of large political donations made in digital assets.
As crypto wealth scales and enters more political systems through direct party funding, media ownership, and advocacy groups, democracies are going to need clearer answers about what they’re actually trying to regulate: foreign interference, donor concentration, crypto opacity, or all three simultaneously.
The UK’s new rules represent a credible early attempt at drawing that line, and the 2029 election will tell us whether it was enough.
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The Guardian’s reporting on Christopher Harborne formed the basis of the reported facts in this article. CryptoSlate has not independently verified all elements of that reporting.
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